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| Warlord & standard bearer for my 28mm orc horde surrounded by his heavily armored bodyguards |
My regular gaming group appears to be getting excited and geared up for playing games of
Dragon Rampant, 2nd Edition.
Four of us have purchased the rules and have several forces we can
field, which will be more than enough to lend troops to the others who
don't. To me, that means our first game will likely be soon. So, I
figured it was time to paint my horde commander and his bodyguard unit. I
decided to go with a 6-man "unit", but decided to paint a standard
bearer as well as the 7th man. I know that doesn't jive with the rules,
but I figure I can farm out one of the bodyguard figures as a leader in
another unit of orcs.
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| Closeup of two members of the orc bodyguard -- 28mm Gripping Beast from the Ragnorak range |
From the unpainted lead I bought earlier
this year, I picked out six of the most heavily-armored figures that I
have remaining. One of them
kind of looked like he could be the
general himself, but honestly, none of the six really stood out that
much more than the others. So, I looked through my other unpainted 28mm
figures (humans) to see if there was one that looked imposing and orcish
enough at the same time. I found a figure that I hadn't painted up from
my Saga Mongol army. It was a foot figure of Genghis Khan and is
freaking huge! I would estimate it towers at least head and shoulders
above normal 28mm figures. What's more, he looked really cool. I liked
him. Plus, many Tolkien fans have remarked that his descriptions of orcs
jives with the way Mongols or Huns were often described by Europeans.
Perfect!
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| Orc bodyguards of the 'Bonefish Band' form a shieldwall to protect their boss, the horde commander |
Next, I had to decide on a color scheme. The rest of the
army had been painted up irregularly, with no figures identical to each
other. However, I wanted the commander's bodyguard to be somewhat
uniform. I decided to mimic, to a degree, the color scheme of late
Republican Roman legionaries. Tunics would be painted a dark blood red.
Their chainmail would be silver, but their leg greaves, arm guards,
helmets, and any other plate armor would be bronze. I have always felt
that color scheme is a really effective .
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| Originally a huge Genghis Khan figure, I think the mini makes a mean-looking orc warlord |
However, the Genghis
Khan commander figure had completely different equipment and armor from
the rest of the orcs. He holds a bow in one hand and a long curved sword
in the other. His armor looks almost like samurai armor, with intricate
designs that evoke lamellar. I wanted it to really stand out, so
decided to go with several metallic colors for the armor. I wanted the
tones to complement the blood red of his tunic. First, I painted the
armor an Iron Wind Metals Steel base coat. Next, I did the horizontal
banding on the armor a reddish gold color. Between each horizontal band,
the armor looks like it is composed of tiny vertical plates. I decided
to do these in alternating colors. My first thought was three separate
colors in a pattern, but in the end decided to go with two. I chose an
Iron Wind Metals Cooper (to stay with the reddish theme) and a more
yellow golden color.
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| Closeup of the other three members of the warlord's bodyguard - I'm happy with their color scheme |
Once I finished all of this detailing, which took almost an entire one hour painting session it itself, I was
very
happy with how the orc boss came out. I like to blurt out Orc quotes
from the Lord of the Rings movies sometimes when I'm painting my horde.
It gets me in the mood, makes me giggle a little, and breaks up the
routine. If I remember correctly, when orcs in the tower in Mordor
discover Frodo's mithril silver shirt, one barks at the other, "Hands
off my shiny shirt!", sparking a fight. Of course, I had to say that and
repeat it several more times during the painting process. This orc
commander does indeed have a very shiny shirt!
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| Couple angles of the orc boss and his standard bearer on their large, hexagonal 'Saga style' base |
I also brightened
up the bronze armor of his bodyguard a bit with highlights of gold here
and there. I figure these guys might have some weaker servants who they
force to burnish up their equipment a bit more than the average orc or
goblin. I also decided to go with a "unit" shield design. My thread on
the
Lead Adventure Forum
where I publish photos of each batch of figures uses an orc quote, too,
"Gut you like a bonefish!" So, I have been putting fish skeletons here
and there on the shields of the orcs and goblins that I've been painting
up. I decided the bodyguard would have two bonefish skeletons around
their central iron boss. I wanted the shield color to be lighter so that
I could use my black micron pens for the design. I decided to go with a
faded reddish, salmon color. Of course, I know someone will quip, "Your
orc bodyguards have pink shields? Haha!" I've used this color in the
warband from time to time, and I like its faded look for cloth. So, I
went with it!
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| Warlord and his bodyguard form up after looting and burning a human settlement |
I also decided to base the orc commander and his
bodyguard on the same stand, one of my larger hexagonal ones. This is
much like I did with my Saga armies. It makes the big man (or orc) stand
out from the crowd of individually based figures. I almost put a wolf
on the base, too. I didn't have one the right size, though. All of them
were either too small or too big. The flag that the standard bearer
carries was designed in Photoshop, as usual, and printed out on a laser
printer at the local Office Max store. I'm really happy with how the
bodyguards came out, and look forward to the Bonefish Band making it to
the tabletop soon.
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| Close up of the standard bearer - or the figure I converted into one! |
What's on my painting desk now? Well,
everything I need to exceed the number of figures I purchased or
acquired this year! There is a batch of four goblins and two trolls that
are in the flocking stages. Look for a post on them very soon. There
are also the five 28mm animals I never got around to finishing when I
was getting my Devilry Afoot spirit animals ready. And finally, there is
a batch of Redcaps -- those bloody malevolent goblins of Scottish myth.
Two of the figures are 3-D printed 28mm
Redcaps from Nolzur's Marvelous Miniatures. The other eight are an impulse purchase earlier this year from
Conquest Games.
I picked up a few packs of their Svartalfar -- goblinoid figures that
had no idea were as tiny as they were! Honestly, they look to be almost
15mm scale, but are very cool, as is all of their Myths of Albion range.
They have no caps on their head, though, so I am sculpting those out of
green stuff. I've never really been that proficient with it, so this
will definitely be a learning experience. Stay tuned to see how they
come out!
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| With the way I 'ripple' my banners with white glue, I can't take a good shot of it - so here it is! |
MINIATURES Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025- Miniatures acquired in 2025: 306
- Miniatures painted in 2025: 286
TERRAIN Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025
- Terrain acquired in 2025: 62
- Terrain painted in 2025: 80
SCATTER Acquired vs. Painted Tally for 2025
- Scatter acquired in 2025: 144
- Scatter painted in 2025: 213
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| A final look at this batch of 28mm Gripping Beast orcs -- 20 figures away from my goal...! |
Lovely bodyguard and the commander is a cracker, a very imposing looking character, pity the enemy who comes up against him! Super work on them all Mike.
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